4.8 Article

Widespread drought-induced tree mortality at dry range edges indicates that climate stress exceeds species' compensating mechanisms

Journal

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
Volume 25, Issue 11, Pages 3793-3802

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/gcb.14771

Keywords

climate change; extreme events; plant traits; species distribution; vegetation model

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [1714972, 1802880, DBI-1711243]
  2. David and Lucille Packard Foundation
  3. USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture [2018-67019-27850, 2018-67012-28020]

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Drought-induced tree mortality is projected to increase due to climate change, which will have manifold ecological and societal impacts including the potential to weaken or reverse the terrestrial carbon sink. Predictions of tree mortality remain limited, in large part because within-species variations in ecophysiology due to plasticity or adaptation and ecosystem adjustments could buffer mortality in dry locations. Here, we conduct a meta-analysis of 50 studies spanning >100 woody plant species globally to quantify how populations within species vary in vulnerability to drought mortality and whether functional traits or climate mediate mortality patterns. We find that mortality predominantly occurs in drier populations and this pattern is more pronounced in species with xylem that can tolerate highly negative water potentials, typically considered to be an adaptive trait for dry regions, and species that experience higher variability in water stress. Our results indicate that climate stress has exceeded physiological and ecosystem-level tolerance or compensating mechanisms by triggering extensive mortality at dry range edges and provides a foundation for future mortality projections in empirical distribution and mechanistic vegetation models.

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